Gerald Finzi is one of the best-known modern English
composers. While he is especially famous as a
song-writer, for his sensitive settings of poets such as
Hardy and Wordsworth, he also wrote in other genres;
notable works include the exquisite cantata Dies
Natalis, and his cello concerto. He also exerted a major
influence in the musical world as a whole, championing
the neglected Ivor Gurney and reviving
eighteenth-century composers with the amateur orchestra
he founded.In this lively and sensitive study of his
life and works, Diana McVeagh, the renowned Elgar and
Finzi scholar, has made use of interviews with the main
figures in his life, correspondence with contemporaries
such as Vaughan Williams, Edmund Blunden, Arthur Bliss,
Edmund Rubbra, Howard Ferguson and Herbert Howells, and
her access to previously unpublished material in the
form of his widow, Joy's, unpublished journal. The Finzi
that emerges is a multi-faceted and complex
character.The author shows how he developed from a
solitary, introverted youth into a man with strong views
and a myriad of interests: everything from education,
pacifism, vegetarianism, to the Arts and Crafts
movement, the English pastoral tradition, English apple
varieties, and the significance of ancestry, friendship
and marriage in an artist's life. She also discusses
every work within the narrative of Finzi's life, and
shows what makes his output so outstanding.Diana McVeagh
is the author of the highly acclaimed Elgar the Music
Maker (2007); of the entries on Elgar and Finzi for The
New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians (1980,
2001); and of the Finzi entry in The Oxford Dictionary
of National Biography (2004). |
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